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Durham Review (1897), 17 Feb 1927, p. 7

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TO REâ€" w F Urâ€" tha ADS wi to The sugar industry has been estabâ€" lished well within historical times, -o{ that its whole story can be told; and the two crops from which sugar u! chiofly made are of very different types and have very different hisâ€" tories. Together they help to make plain much of the manner in which agâ€" rleulture has developed. The sugar cane is a native of East Indies. The first accounts of it that Europe had were brought on their reâ€" turn by soldiers who had followed Alexander the Great into India,. Though the EKast Indians and the Chinese had then been growing it for centuries, there is no record of their having made sugar from itâ€"at least, not on a commercial scale. Honey was the great sweetening agent of the anâ€" clent world. The cane seems to have been caten at first, and the juice was extracted and druak "just so," or ferâ€" mented to make a more heady beverâ€" age, or boiled down to make preserves or sweetmeats. It was apparently some five or six centuries after the time of Alexander that sugar first beâ€" camo known as an article of com merce. From India the sugar cane CANADA YIELDS PERFUME ELEMENTS LIST OF ACTUAL OR POâ€" TENTIAL RESOURCES. 2N vi tiC ‘ssentials for Perfumery Inâ€" dustry Found from Atlantic to Pacific Coast. CoT fume. . There cial varieties gian, which London mark 1 U Te fum« Though the sperm whale is not «\ofl-" mon â€" in the north Pacific ocean, its, biklous secretion called "ambergris" , found floating in whaling areas or: taken from the carcass is a byâ€"product . of the Canadian whaling industry. The: price varies from about $25 a pound tol its woight in gold. It is one of the] most valuable materials used by the‘ perfumer owing to its marvelous fixaâ€" tive propertios especially adapted for oldâ€"fashioned eauâ€"doâ€"cologne. i The civit of the porfumer is a yelâ€" lowish fatty glandular secretion s charged by the civet cat of Abyssinia and the Indian Archipelago, and also by a variety of muskrat aml other species. . It is not unlikely that the Canadian muskrat might be found to yield a similar product. It might even be the case that the discharge of the Canadian skunk might be of value. Lanolin, the anhydrous preparation from wool fat, is useful in toilet preâ€" paraiions, being readily absorbed by the skin and free from a tendency to ind the skin rancidity Vegetable Origin. The English lavemder oil distilled from the plants grown at Mitcham, Surrey and other places brings a highâ€" er price than the French oil. _ The very large lavonder industry in Piedâ€" mont owes its great prosperity to the transplantation of Mitcham roots to Italian soil. There seems to be no reason why, in a mild climate such as that of the Pacific coast, Mitcham laveider should not be grown in Canâ€" ada. The same is true of rosemary, a perenmuial, another specialty of Engâ€" pn‘, and of thyme, another perennial, m _ known as an articie of con *. From India the sugar cane carried eastward to the Phillipâ€" and the other islands of the Paâ€" and westward by way of Persia Arabia through Northern Africa Southern Europe. The Moors inâ€" 1y It The Story of Sugar i Lo f 1,0 Un h it d. The n at first and dru: > make a iled dow: glands, INnos0o 10 after the death « od cither by sm« is one of the fot n n s indispe giving th Animal Origin poiy 1] m h an rfum m Deayer of ©CxEMT! lan aromatic O.l Wit dn Oudt 0C PMECt ontents of an Olly,| apple. | secreted by ‘“’0‘ The fragrant flowors and leaves of hose follocles are T€â€" the yellow clover yield an oil used for leath of the animal| flayoring guyere cheese. * y smoke or in the| Calamus cil is distilled from the the four or five xmi'!arommic root stock of the common yensable to the porâ€" ‘ sweet flag and sells in Montreal wholeâ€" the "life" to a POTâ€"| sale at $5 a pound. only two commer-‘ Sassafras is a tree found in Southâ€" astoreum, the Rufl'lern Ontario, the inner root bark, im appears on the| leaves and wood of which yield saffrol, id the Canadian. la.n oil used as a cheap perfume for n th f! b h ab 4y Td Canada, shows ducts of eitrus t peppermints, abla raw Maâ€" P astoreum C ibraneous aver of eit ha n atural _ re ig the florg s and aro Introduced s and am h nt by the gence Serâ€" la, whether timn to the 1GS=ONn been n n s not von-!sc.np. As a substitute is made from occan, its crude camphor oil and the sassafras lmbergrls"'is so abundant in the southâ€"central areas or ; states, it does not seem profitable that byâ€"product | saffrol could be profiably made in Canâ€" ustry. The ada, especially as the price is as low a pound to‘as 38 cents a pound. one of the', Aniso, caraway, coriander and fenâ€" ed by the'nel might also be cultivated for the relous fixaâ€" oils distilled from the seeds and plant, dapted for though climatic and other conditions C iwou!d make it dificult for a large scale c is a yel production to compete with other \_lll. ‘®. | countries. it in ran & ind n prac ; Bay orth LrOâ€" reâ€" her he in troduced it into Spain; and Columbus brought it to America on his later voyages. Five hundred years before the time of Columbus, the Arabs had greatly improved the hitherto crude methods of making sugar; later, the Vonetians had made still further imâ€" provements; and sugar had become a staple article of commerce instead of a luxury so rare as to be a curiosity. Sugar cane was being cultivated in the Wost Indies when the Jesuit exâ€" plorers of Canada found the Iroquois boiling down maple sap to make a pesty sugar. The maple sugar indusâ€" try continued to ilve, but it did not grow much; and so, despite the makâ€" ing of some sugar from date palms and other sources, practically all the wor‘d‘s supply of sugar for three hunâ€" dred years after the time of Columbus came from the sugar cane. tory was established; now more than oneâ€"third of the world‘s supply of sugar comes from the sugarâ€"beet. In 1747, however, a German chemist, lad on to experiment by the sweetish taste of the garden beet, found that sugar identical with cane sugar could be extracted from it. Beets had been grown as a gardon crop in the counâ€" tries about the Mediterranean Sea for more than 2,000 years; but they had been only a sort of relish until this time. In 1799 the first beet sugar facâ€" which #s grown succoessfully at the Ottawa Experimental Farm. Other plants of the mint family capâ€" ablo of culture in severail districts are sweet basil, an annual, summer sayâ€" ory, an annual, and sweet marjoram, & perennial,. The horse mint or balm and the wikl bergamot are both hardy perennials and produce oils useful as antiseptics in tooth paste. All the above plants be‘iong to the Labiatae or mint family, but these of this family which are commercially culldâ€" vated to supply the peppermint oil inâ€" dustry of Michigan, Indiana and New York, are the peppermint and spearâ€" mint. They have been grown in the Umited States for distillation for the la«t ons hundred vears, and could be grown ( Canada are: Canadian snakeâ€"root or wild ginger, the distillad oil from which gives a speâ€" cial tone to the eauâ€"deâ€"cologne made by American perfumers and is usod only in high class toilet soaps because the will mint is abundant. In 1922 there wers 15,500 acres in the U.8.A. usod for peppermiat and 2,000 used for spearmint. The United States Bureau of Plant Industry, Bulletin No. 454, along with the United States Farmers Bulletin 694, fuly describe the method of culture. 4 Other plants which cou‘d be used in Canada are: Creeping Winiergr« as "teaâ€"berry," yields green oil. A nearly distilted from the inne of the swoot birch, & "cherry birch," found in Quebec and. New Brunswick near the United States boundary. ‘ A variety of goldenrod yields from its leaves an oil with a fragrancy like aniseâ€"sood, and is a native of Canada. (Gilant Hyseop yields an "intensely fragrant cdor" from its flowers and leaves, and grows abundantly on the Pacific coast of North America. _ Use might also be made of the leaves of the Douglas Fir, which yield an aromatic 6 with an odor of pineâ€" Carrageen or Irish Moss gathered from the rocks of the Atlantic coast and Vancouver Island and containing about 90 per cent. of mucilage, is used as the bqsis of cheap skin creams where tragacanth guf (from Asla Minor) would be to expensive. Maize starch is a useful basis for cheap face powder as a substitute for rice starch. The bark and leaves of Hammelis Virginiana, growing from New Bruumsâ€" wick to Ontario, yield the well known Witch Hazol, which is used as an asâ€" tringert in hair lotions and in the comâ€" position of face creams. Directions and advice as to growing, harvesting and distillation of most of the above plants and trees are to be found in Bulletin No. 19 of the United States Bureau of Plant Industry. Other aromatic plants of Canada are named in Bulletin No. 88 of the Dominion Deâ€" partment of Agriculture (p.30) such as sweet sical, vanilla leaf, etc. Mineral Origin. The talcum powder, largely used in face powders, is a tefined quality of the hbydrated silicate of magnesium n nundred yedars, and CoOmId nB mmercially in Canada, where lergreen, known also ields the true winterâ€" early identical oil is * inner bark and twigs rch, sometimes called found in Quebec and near the United States known as soapstone. The finest quality is pure white and a special produce of Italy, which in 1923 exported 17,000 tons, of which the United States took 5.150. Whoether the taic, which Canâ€" ada produces in large amounts for use in the paper, paint and other indusâ€" tries and a‘so exports, is of the éxact quality required for cosmetics, is @ subject for industry, Kaolin, a Canadian product from St. Remi, Quebec, is the akyminum silicate known as China clay. An clectrolytiâ€" cally purified form of this named "Osmose Kaolin" is wail adapted for use as face powder and as a substituto for prepared chalk in tooth pastes, Opportunities in Canada. The chemical synthetics which now play so large a part in the perfume inâ€" dustry and dye chemicals of all shades can be manufactured in Canada as well as elsewhere. The necessary alcoâ€" hol is an unfailing native product. It is officially stated in 1924 that "essenâ€" tial oils are for the most part imported and synthotic perfumes are not known to be made here, with the exception of mothyl salicylate," i.e., artificial winâ€" tergreen. Under present conditions of lack of experience and cost of labor, to devote any considerable acreage and capital to growing peppermint or other aroâ€" matic plants and extracting the perâ€" fume even under expert advice would be hazardous, but it might be otherâ€" wise in the case of individual growers provided with a simple still. Coâ€" operation between a number of local growers owning or supporting a cenâ€" tral distillery for essential oils, as pracâ€" tised in parts of the United States might also succeed, The Improvement of Crops. _ The wheat of Neolithic times was like the wheat of toâ€"day. The varieties of Indian corn we plant toâ€"day may be new as varieties; but the Indians, beâ€"| fore Columbus came, had every type of corn we now have. Dent and flint, sweet and flour, pop and pod, early and late, white and yeliow, and red and blue cornsâ€"they had them all. The original wild wheat, if there be. such, from which the wheat of cultivaâ€" tion came; the primitive type of corn, from which all the various types are developed, is yet to be found. On the other hand, we can trace most of the fruits of our temperate clime back to their wild originais, and we can trace the process of their improvement from genoration to generation almost. The apples and peaches and strawberries of toâ€"day are very different from, and much better than, the apples and ;peaches and strawherries of even a hundred years ago. The tomato has been so improved within the memory of men now living that it may be said to have been made over. In the same space of time the sugar content of the sugar beet has been doubled, and a great new crop brought into being. Go if you will and must, Your round bright eyes % Will look on many marvels Without surprise. And you will rest in jungles And peer down craters And see eslow antâ€"eaters And alligators. Then you will come some morning To your old tree And set your old example Of domesticity. Â¥You hear a lot of people saying they wish it was Thursday, or they wish it was their birthday or that it was summer or that this Job was done. Now wo never could get the idea of wishing away time. You might as weli wish away one of your legs. Every time a day goes past there‘s just so much dess of you left. Elizabeth Coatsworth, in "Voices." Wishing Away Time. K.25 To Birds. ADAMSON‘S ADVENTURESâ€"By O. Jacobsson. _ Home sewing brings nice clothes \ within the reach of all, and to follow | the mode is delightful when it can be ‘done so easily and economically, by |\following the styles pictured in our |new Fashion Bock. A chart accomâ€" | panying each pattern shows the maâ€" \terial as it appears when cut out. lF.vory detail is explained so that the inexperienced sewer can make without difficulty an attractive dress. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. ‘ HowW TO ORDER PATTERNS. The boy who wears the mackinaw pictured here will find it indispensable for cool days, yet not burdensome in any way. The shawl collar may be worn as illustrated or rolled open, at the front. There are muff and patchâ€" pockets, twoâ€"piece sleeves, and a belt. No. 1495 is in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 10 requires 214 yards 44â€" inch material, or 1% yards 5#inch. Price 20 cents the pattern. A MACKINAW FOR COOL DAYS Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adeâ€" laide ®t., Toronto. â€" Patterns sent by return mail. f R Garnet wheat has proved itself equal to its reputation, says the experts of tho Federal ‘Department of Agriculâ€" ture. Hon. W. R. Motherwell, Minister of Agriculture, avers that the reports from scores of farmers who grew Garâ€" met wheat last year are unanimous on the one vital claim of the wheatâ€"that it ripens ton days earber. than Marâ€" quis. It is, therefore, highly suitable for growing along the northern littoral of the wheat belt. And it was to farmâ€" ers in thoso northern latitudes that the Government sent seed for plantâ€" ing. Yiekis have also been high. One farmer, having only twelve acres availâ€" able for sowing harvested 64 bushels to the acreâ€"a crop worth $2,000. Garnet Wheat Proves Itself. C .B es 1495 CARE OF MOTOR REPAYS QWNER IN EFFICIENCY. Automobile owners need to consider and adopt some practical program for operating and taking care of the valuâ€" able machines they acquire. & Among the most essential features with electroiyte, distilled water B!Iy] which should be incorporated in such need to be added every week or two. a program perhaps first in importance All connections should be adequately is lubrication. A sensible plan of luâ€" tightened.. Batteries should be tested brication calls for maintaining an oil oceasionally. level in the crankease sufficient to When going up a steep hill or havâ€" keep the engine functioning properly. ing a hard pull relieve the engine of It is usually considered advisable to unmecessary strain by going into first change this oil about once in every 500 or second speed. Be sure the clutch miles. Manufacturers usually furnish pedal is fully depressed when shifting a lubrication chart which comes with gears. Keep the spring clips tight the car. This should be studied and and theâ€"shackle bolts free and thorâ€" its recommendations followed systemâ€"| oughly oiled. atically, _ e neg ‘ aIyE car "BaATH" PREQUENTEY, in::(;'ts};::nlm?l?}::mr;dlit::zrm slt\:filfla To protect the beauty of the car it liept filled.w‘th 1 ter in th should be given a good bath frequently i P L. with clear water in th® onough to keep the finish free from «ummer within three mcheg of the top grease and dirt. igndhv:th. abede"“o"}free;lo?g n,m(tit’ure! It is important not only from the H: 'l;ce twtlf" h{. d . :tn 1 tln:? ht?;‘; standpoint of insuring the rider comâ€" weath!:r lg’l‘lf:ew'ag;' ::1:; ypz::ki:gf f?rt, but also fr.om the mnxinpum het» nut neo;ds frequent inspection and yice of ‘um“-mb”e fires, to give them fightening if noctésary m frequent testing as to the air pressure, * Now that balloon tires have come into KEEP WHEEL ADJUSTED AND OILED, lg'eneral use, there is sometimes a tendâ€" The steecring apparatus is a vital ency to allow the pressure to become part of the automobile and its mechanâ€" ‘ too low, with the rosult that the fabric ism must be kept properly adjusted| in the sides of the tires is encouraged and well lubricated. The alignment of | in rapid deterioration. The manufacâ€" | the front wheels is another matter to| turer‘s instruction book usually states watch. Of course, the brakes shouldlthe best number of pounds of air pres always be kept in proper adjustment sure to carry in tires under various to perform effective service. It is conâ€"| cireumstances, sidered undesirable to form the habit| While there are numerous minor deâ€" of riding the clutch pedal. tails concerning which the owner of ar ! When starting the car the foot should be moved from the starting | pedal as soon as the engine begins to | fire. The choke button should be pushâ€" Ied in before the cylinders begin to flood with gasoline. It is undesirable to race the engine just after it has started or to undertake high speed | Vanilia Ice Cream. ! Fiftyâ€"five per cent. of all ice cream manufactured is flavored with vanilla. , The chocolate variety is a poor second ‘with 10 per cent. and strawberry is [ thira with 8 per cent. General Sir George W. A. mgginson.l who won promotion for his service in | the Crimean war, died recently at his : home, â€" Gyldernscroft, Marlow â€" on ‘ Thames. He celebrated his 100lhl birthday last June by reviewing the Grenadiér Guards, which he jJoined 82| years ago. He held decorations from the French and Italian governments. | Of Interest to Motorists o / Crimean War Officer Dead FIRE! TORONTO before the machine is thoroughly warmed up. Carburetor adjustments are usually best made by a service mechanic. Scee that there is always sufficient fuel in the gasoline tank. To keep the battery plates covered with electrolyte, distilled water may need to be added every week or two. All connections should be adequately tightened.. Batteries should be tested oceasionally. It is important not only from the standpoint of insuring the rider comâ€" fort, but also from the maximum serâ€" vice of automobile tires, to give them frequent testing as to the air pressure. Now that balloon tires have come into general use, there is sometimes a tendâ€" ency to allow the pressure to become too low, with the result that the fabric in the sides of the tires is encouraged in rapid deterioration. The manufacâ€" turer‘s instruction book usually states the best number of pounds of air presâ€" sure to carry in tires under various cireumstances. While there are numerous minor deâ€" tails concerning which the owner of an automobils should be familiar, these which have been given are most essenâ€" tial from the standpoint of operation and care. If they are given adeguate attention by owners of automobiles it can be taken for granted that their automobile experience during 1927 will be satisfactory. is withcut a doubt perity. On the cth« potent business ton measure of adve: leads to extravagan carelessness in bus? in production. Why the world by the ta versity comes we f« on the apparently tr can we cut down ex we improy duct? We item in ou searchligh wise wou! is a great ty lays th piness ans light of a calamily, but must be a¢â€" cepted as discipline." Frequently,| much needed discipline. We have all felt its hoavy hand during the past: few years, and on‘ly a fool will mainâ€" tain that those who survived the stress and strain are not beter off for It. Two conditions are facing us now. First, a runâ€"by a‘l the rules, a long run â€"of favorable seasous. Secondly, the wisdom and balance, born of adâ€" versity, to make the most of the good fortune in store for us. Without the latter, the former would be of small ultimate use. Farmers are prone to take the posâ€" simistic attitude an4â€"God knowsâ€"we ‘wo usually have ample cause to comâ€" plain. But we musl not run away with the idea that we are, and have been, the only sufferers, and the wear and tear in town life during the past strenuous period of depression has been almost beyond belief, Unemâ€" ployment has been rampant and starâ€" vation far from unknown. Only th08®]| ) 0 oo on their own hbomes, AC with fixed salaries and permanent emâ€"| femilies own their own homes, 4C ploymentâ€"a sinall proportion of me«mrdln‘ to a brief bulletin issued by whoieâ€"have escaped most of lhol‘he Dominion Bureau of Statistics, It strain. Turning our eyes to Europe.!“ho" that of the 2,001,515 families in we find a condition, rural and ur\;an,‘c.“‘d.‘ 1,239,150 own their own homes in comparison with which our put%m 762,362 rent. TPhere are 1,023,738 i oubles seeth «Aildigh and poury, .. Any | urhan femilies in tbe couslty ant of it is only by drawing comparisons that ] these 46 per cent. own their homes, we are ghis to form an estimate of our!| whila, 78 per cent. or 977,776 families orn lot in Hite. . The C Hian “rm;llvinx in . country districts possess is a pretty good place after all. y, {thetr #=®# domidles.. has its conpensating advan i | yure Count oigincies 4n the mway <of m :.‘i'm?ii Veerg fa Ithe CountÂ¥h ‘meuun of rural prosperity are gradâ€" A teacher was Instructing ber class ually being froned out in lccordnnco':'“ the use of antonyims. "Now, childâ€" with immutable economic laws. ltl""‘" she said, "what is the opposite may take years to restore normn.l¢°f..'°r o o . . M oononic adjustments, But the sact iws 1 | _ Aot . ahtitket the dlare in «ho mains, that the process is at work and | ..Wh“..h the opposite of pleasure?" (he tesdenty is in the Sight direction.|. ... i We are looking for a larger immigraâ€" ..AM 'b:t e the apposite of «061 tlon to Cansda. in the iflmeliate] â€" _ .*"*** [ ME Y en nc future, which will add its invigorating tonch to Canadian agriculture. It has taken fifty years to provide a telephons exchange for every county in Great Britain and Ireland, but with the provision of exchanges in County Mayo and Sutherlandshire the chain is now complete. Rural Advorsity and its Compensations. ys the foundation for futur ss and prosperity. Therefo ity must not be regarded . teache » the qt are force C. W. Peler in pace we can. The m« fAuence any busin possibly be subjer i doubt â€" continued he cther bhand, th« iss tonic is a reas adversity. Prof ivagance in manag in busfness re‘atio b ail! )enses . ality 0 1 to g0 us and 3 whe: seen Adver ) managen our thi M AM arded in the must be acâ€" Frequently, We have all ing the past ol will mainâ€" n A I omf gric n We hav« when ad attentior H cled to 1 "prosâ€" e most )w can How ible rity n |\â€" _Oaneda, however, is rich in potenâ€" tial resources of olfl which will unâ€" doubtedly be utilized when the world‘s petroleum fields begin to show actualâ€" ly serious diminution of output and ap» proaching exhaustion. The petroleum oll fields that have so far been found and developed in Canâ€" ada have produced, during a period of 65 years, some 27,000,000 barrels of crude petroleum, or less than 2% per cent. of the presont annual world outâ€" It is evident that, in Canada, oill fields have not yet been found that may be compared in extent of output with the great cil fields of other parts of the world. Intensive prospecting is under way at the present time, the results of which, particularly those of the Turner Valley field it Alberta with its phenomenal individual well output of light olls and gas, are highly enâ€" couraging, and indicate possibilities for the future discovery of natural oils in great volume. Canada‘s Potential Resources ut Processes for the complete liquefacâ€" tion of coal by means of high presâ€" sures and temporatures and by catalyâ€" tic action were prominent in the papers and addresses presented at the recent Intarnational Conference on Pituminous Coal held at Pittsburgh, Penneylvania, US.A, Indeed the outâ€" standing feature of this meeting is reâ€" ported to have been a practically unâ€" animous conclusion that the solid fuels, including the bituminous and lignite coals of a all kinds, will, when natural petroleum sources are eXxâ€" haused, prove to be the principal sources of ofl. This conclusion is of the greatest significance to Canada in view of the country‘s enormous coal resources. The rapidly increasing demand for liquid fuels of @ll descriptions, coupled with the threaterned depletion of the natural oifi resources of the United States, from which Canada derives the major portion of her oil supplics, has already directed attention to the enorâ€" mous bituminous sand deposits of the iprovinco of Alberta and the oil shale areas of the Maritime Provinces. The ldovekmmnm and perfection of crackâ€" | ing processos, which make it possible to recover high percontages of motor residuum sand a promin the bit amined in 84 of cven a roug oll content, ar In v in« n portlonately far others who atte A new policy children has b their number h« Instead of bein are to have spe and are to be tion in busses. be held in Wel! When it is considered that in a yrral district having 5000 children of school age, there would not be more than five children so badly crippled as to be unable to walk to school, it is easily seen why the large cities have been the first to establish special classes. The cost and dificulty of transportation have been the great obstacle in sparsely settled communtâ€" ties. In Ontario during the past year a number of associations have attackâ€" ed the problem of rendering practical assistance to the handicapped child. Canadians Own Their Homes. Heard in the Country. A teacher was Instructing ber class in the use of antonyims. "Now, childâ€" ren," she said, "what is the opposite of sorrow *" "Joy," shrieked the class in unison. "What is the opposite of pleasure*" "Pain." "And what is the opposite of woe*" Special Giasses for Children With Physical Handicaps. Company‘s buDd‘rege at Beaupre are neurin‘ completion and will be ready to receive the paper machines at any time now. The work on the Angloâ€" Canadian P% and Paper Co. mill has started well rnd some of t!u d for the framework has already beenm the world for man ile resources of t ices, though they 1 ined in sufficlent even a rough estin u8 Sixstytwo per cent of Canadian ute ninence the bituminous oil shales es for the i Toronto an the sam an educat Many of them jlearn that they t can 84 that the un nt a teacher ha i their own | n tended school eve cy with regard t been decided or has so greatly in« ing taught at hor pecial classes in a e given free trai s. These classos bitu motor f the manufa roducts. p\ Th pportun it as norm n net i J wn hnol make it possible ontages of motor ; from petroleum en of bituminous has brought into bility of utilizing s of Alberta and h spirits an ply the d v vears. iminot Ste. Anne Paper M prog e transporiaâ€" lassoes are to ire @arituir not b i to hilds Inst ave nad id vi it th iome b The PV enore f the shale The n ho h nC@

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